Today's Donald Trump news: Billionaire businessman Donald Trump's decision to eject Univision anchor Jorge Ramos from an Iowa press event has outraged Latino pop star Ricky Martin, who vented his ire in an opinion piece for the network: "We have to defeat the power that Trump pretends to have over Latinos, anchored in low rhetoric and xenophobic speech, which his campaign team is convinced works for him." said a translation of the Spanish-language op-ed. "Let's show that our Latin race is to be respected:" Billboard

Another musician has a more sanguine view of Trump. Twisted Sister singer Dee Snider, a former contestant on Trump's Celebrity Apprentice TV show, said the tycoon asked permission to use Twister Sister's song "We're Not Gonna Take It," at the end of his rallies, and he was happy to agree. "The song 'We're Not Gonna Take It' is a song about rebellion, and there's nothing more rebellious than what Donald Trump is doing right now," Snider told TMZ (via Blabbermouth). "Although [Democratic presidential candidate] Bernie Sanders can use it as well; he's turning things upside down too." Snider said it was possible Twisted Sister would perform the song at a Trump rally, if asked: The Guardian

Trump says he isn't interested in the endorsement of David Duke, the anti-Semitic former Ku Klux Klan leader who praised the GOP presidential hopeful earlier this week on his radio show. "I don't need his endorsement; I certainly wouldn't want his endorsement," Trump said during an interview with Bloomberg's Mark Halperin and John Heilemann. He added: "I don't need anyone's endorsement." Asked whether he would repudiate the endorsement, Trump said "Sure, I would if that would make you feel better:" Politico

But Duke says he is biding his time before he announces his all-important endorsement in the 2016 election. Despite prior reports, the former Ku Klux Klan leader was adamant in a conversation with The Daily Beast that he has yet to throw his support behind Trump for president, despite calling the billionaire "the best of the lot" on his radio program: The Daily Beast

Trump's margin of support among Republicans is growing, while former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's backing among Democrats is on the decline, according to a new nationwide poll released by Quinnipiac University. The 28 percent that Trump attained among Republicans is up from his 20 percent tally in the university's July 30 national survey. It is the highest level of support for any Republican so far in this election, the pollsters said: Northeast Ohio Media Group

In a Tuesday night speech in Iowa, Trump -- who has regularly promoted his negotiating skills as a selling point for his presidency -- used broken English to briefly impersonate Asian negotiators. "When these people walk into the room, they don't say, 'Oh hello, how's the weather? It's so beautiful outside. How are the Yankees doing? They're doing wonderful, that's great," Trump said, to some laughter from the crowd. "They say, 'We want deal!'" CNN

Trump did his stand-up routine the same day he took to Twitter to trash rival Jeb Bush for making a reference to Asians while discussing "anchor babies." The term, used to describe the U.S.-born citizen children of undocumented immigrants, is widely considered a slur. The comedy act by Trump -- who's made tough talk about economic competition with China and Japan a staple of his presidential pitch -- angered Asian-American advocacy groups. "If these offensive remarks continue, no one should be surprised when Asian American voters turn their back on Republican candidates in 2016, said Margaret Fung of the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund:" New York Daily News